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Six Months Later, Long-Term Recovery Becomes Focus in Alabama

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – Great progress has been made in the six months since a historic outbreak of storms and tornadoes forever changed the landscape of numerous Alabama communities. To date, approximately $530 million in federal funds has been approved to help survivors, businesses, communities and the state of Alabama rebuild safer and stronger. While grants are still being processed, officials with the Alabama Emergency Management Agency and the Federal Emergency Management Agency say long-term recovery is now the focus.

“We’ve come a long way in cleaning up and rebuilding our communities because of the spirit and resilience of the people of this great state,” said AEMA State Coordinating Officer Jeff Byard. “And now people in many of these communities are contributing their voices, their ideas to the long-term recovery of their neighborhoods and towns.”

From the very beginning of the disaster, the state and FEMA have placed great emphasis on the Long-Term Community Recovery program to empower communities to develop step-by-step recovery plans. Local leaders can use these plans in rebuilding based on community needs and wants.

To date, almost a dozen Alabama communities have requested assistance in their long-term recovery planning, and around 40 related public meetings have taken place across the state. At these gatherings, community members come together to identify their community’s recovery needs and wishes, and to plan and prioritize projects to support their shared vision.

Throughout the process, the Alabama Department of Economic and Community Affairs and FEMA’s Long-Term Community Recovery teams have provided support and technical expertise. In the months ahead, ADECA and FEMA will continue to serve in an advisory role as communities advance toward long-term rebuilding and renewal.

“Long-term recovery is just as important on the individual level,” said FEMA Federal Coordinating Officer Joe M. Girot. “One of the keys to rebuilding communities is the successful recovery of the people who live in those communities. So far, $175 million in federal grants and loans have gone to Alabama families and businesses to help them rebuild their lives.”

That figure includes more than $72.8 million in FEMA grant money to help Alabamians meet housing and other needs and more than $102.8 million from the U.S. Small Business Administration’s low-interest disaster loan program – the largest source of federal rebuilding funds.

More than 8,000 individuals and families have been provided rental assistance or shelter in temporary mobile homes. The state and FEMA continue working with survivors still receiving temporary housing assistance to help them locate a permanent place to live.

Still, for some survivors, more assistance is sometimes needed. That’s where Long-Term Recovery Committees (LTRCs) come in. With support and guidance from the Alabama Emergency Management Agency and FEMA, LTRCs coordinate scores of volunteer and service agencies whose case managers help storm survivors across the state. They help survivors solve problems ranging from clean up, repair and home rebuilding to housing assistance and mental health counseling, services that survivors...